flathub.org

TheGrandNagus , to Gnome in Resources 1.5, a system monitoring application, has been released

Resources and Mission Centre are both really good. I never know which to use.

Fisch , to Gnome in Resources 1.5, a system monitoring application, has been released
@Fisch@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I'm currently using Mission Center, which is also really good. One of these should replace GNOME's system monitor tho because it honestly kind of sucks.

possiblylinux127 , (edited )
@possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip avatar

I'd call gnome system monitor good enough but out of place from a layout perspective. Its looked the same for as long as I can remember

I also personally don't like the mission center layout as much. It feels like they copied Windows for no good reason. However, that's just a personal preference

dko1905 ,
@dko1905@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Yeah, I find it really nice to use but I experience a lag spike when I open Mission Center.. so that's a bit annoying.

Oha , to Fediverse in Reddy (for Lemmy) is out! You can install it from Flathub now
@Oha@lemmy.ohaa.xyz avatar

Nice
1000015055

DerisionConsulting , to Fediverse in Reddy (for Lemmy) is out! You can install it from Flathub now

Oh boy.
Another way for people to repost from reddit.

Sunny , to Fediverse in Reddy (for Lemmy) is out! You can install it from Flathub now
@Sunny@slrpnk.net avatar

That's neat tool, thanks for sharing 🌻

lanolinoil , to Fediverse in Reddy (for Lemmy) is out! You can install it from Flathub now
@lanolinoil@lemmy.world avatar

homebrew or bust

Alice ,
@Alice@hilariouschaos.com avatar

Huh ?

gravitas_deficiency ,

We’re not talking about homebrew. We’re talking about flatpak.

If you want it for homebrew so badly, be the change that you want to see.

lanolinoil ,
@lanolinoil@lemmy.world avatar

fair. I fully withdraw and concede

YHAOS

MajorHavoc ,

As much as I appreciate homebrew, I feel better about flatpaks.

I could not defend this position with any articulation, I've just had really good experiences setting up flatpaks wherever they're available.

TrickDacy , to Lemmy Apps in Reddy is out! You can install it from Flathub now

This is a GUI app that works on wsl?? Didn't know that was a thing

mjhelto ,

I knew Microsoft was working toward it and hinting that it was coming, but didn't think it would be available this soon!

Krafting OP ,
@Krafting@lemmy.world avatar

It's been available soince WSL 2 I believe (or maybe just a few revision later) I tested some of my app on WSL on Windows 11 and they appear to work great. Maybe not every app can be run, though

kautau ,

Yeah a whole bunch of apps work on my WSL setup

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/tutorials/gui-apps

…I use Arch, btw

Andromxda ,
@Andromxda@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

ARCH BTW!

This is for anyone wondering how to get Arch on WSL: https://github.com/yuk7/ArchWSL

Blaze , to Lemmy Apps in Reddy is out! You can install it from Flathub now
@Blaze@reddthat.com avatar

Hello,

Thank you for this! I just installed it, currently investigating how to get an API token (it seems that now you need to register?)

Krafting OP ,
@Krafting@lemmy.world avatar

You need a reddit account to create an API key, I believe this has always been the case

Blaze ,
@Blaze@reddthat.com avatar

Yes, I managed to make it work!

Mr_Mofu , to Lemmy Apps in Reddy is out! You can install it from Flathub now
@Mr_Mofu@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Glad to see something like this having become a thing! I'll look forward to giving this one to some of my friends who could use that

Krafting OP ,
@Krafting@lemmy.world avatar

Awesome! If they have feedback about it, let me know

Shareni , to Linux in What are your thoughts on Flatpak/Flathub?

How does it stack up against traditional package management and others like AUR and Nix?

I only used AUR for a few packages (<5 at a time). It's to be avoided and only used if the other options are a massive pain (unless it's an official package).

Then I left Arch and eventually landed on MX. During that time Nix with home-manager has slowly replaced flatpak, and I don't even have it installed anymore. Nix is better in every way, except for ease of use.

Flatpak has great gui integration (for gui tools). You can click through everything, and the updates are unified. It usually works perfectly fine if you just need to install a few programs.

With nix, there's a lot more setup, but there are many benefits. You end up with a list of packages, and that's really useful because you can take a fresh install, install nix and home manager, and then run a single line to reinstall everything. You can rollback updates, pin specific versions, install packages from a repo (if it has a flake.nix with outputs), and also configure them. I'm using the unstable branch, and it's giving me bleeding edge packages on Debian. And there's no risk of outdated system libraries, like with flatpak, because it provides everything.

Guenther_Amanita ,

That all sounds great, thanks!
Do you have any tips for an "easy" start, where everything is already pre-configured?

Shareni , (edited )

Nope, and that's the worst part of nix. I'm actually planning on writing a short startup guide, but I need to solve a few more issues first.

But, this should help you out until then:

The home.nix should be automatically generated, and that's where you put all of your packages. I left a few as an example.

NixGL is needed to use openGL (nixGL lutris for example). It works in most cases, but I couldn't get alacritty or kitty to work. There are some ways to have packages automatically use it, but I still haven't tried them out.

Flake allows you to select the correct nix repo (stable/unstable), appropriate home-manager version, and add outside packages like nixgl. It's technically not necessary, but I wouldn't go without it. Here I'm using the unstable repository, check the relevant docs if you want to go with releases instead.

The equivalent of apt update && apt upgrade is nix flake update && home-manager switch --impure. I like cd-ing into the nix dotfile directory (all of the files are in there and symlinked to ~/.config/ locations), but you can also use command line arguments to point to the flake.

nix flake update updates the package definitions to what's in the repo

home-manager switch install them, and also updates any configs it's managing. The --impure is only needed if you're using nixgl (bad build commands depend on system time).

nix-collect-garbage to force a clean up of unused packages

https://search.nixos.org/packages makes searching for packages a lot easier

https://mynixos.com/search?q=home-manager+ same, but for finding options to configure packages through home-manager

Comment if you need help

update: removed nixGL from flake and home, installed it through nix-channel in order to not use --impure during home-manager switch

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